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Ubergizmo FR -
9 hours and 2 minutes ago
centera href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/zoom.php?dir=2008/11/hp-tx2/" target="_blank"img title="HP
TouchSmart TX2: Multitouch Display on a Consumer Tablet PC" style="MARGIN: 0px" alt="HP TouchSmart
TX2: Multitouch Display on a Consumer Tablet PC"
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/photos/2008/11/hp-tx2-468.jpg" border="0" /br /img
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/fr/img/photo-gallery.gif" border="0" //a/centerbr / pHP a
lancé son portable à écran tactile 12" rotatif multi-touch, le TouchSmart TX2.
Gràce à l'application HP MediaSmart, l'utilisateur peut opérer directement sur
l'écran avec ses doigts ou à l'aide d'un stylet pour plus de précision.br Il
est équipé d'un processeur AMD dual-core Turion Mobile allant de 2.0 à 2.4ghz,
de 8Go de RAM, disque dur de 500Go. Il dispose de BlueTooth, Webcam, graveur DVD. L'affichage est
pris en charge par une ATI Radeon HD3200.br Le tout pour environ 920€./p pmap
name="google_ad_map_081119222522" area shape="rect"
href="http://imageads.googleadservices.com/pagead/imgclick/081119222522?pos=0" coords="1,2,367,28"/
area shape="rect" href="http://services.google.com/feedback/abg" coords="384,10,453,23"//map img
usemap="#google_ad_map_081119222522" border="0"
src="http://imageads.googleadservices.com/pagead/ads?format=468x30_aff_imgamp;client=ca-pub-7335032025195922amp;channel=5336763717amp;output=pngamp;cuid=081119222522amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ubergizmo.com%2Ffr%2Farchives%2F2008%2F11%2Fhp-tx2.php"//p
pa href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/nMwrCnS0WhbDwv8Ko6lp30w9-UI/a"img
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ismap="true"/img/a/pimg src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ubergizmo_fr/~4/Qc-3ZXb0OjE" height="1"
width="1"/

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Gizmodo -
10 hours and 27 minutes ago
pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/11/blackberrystorm.jpg" align="left"
hspace="4" vspace="2" width="804" height="613" style="display:block;float:none;" /It's hard to
overstate how important the BlackBerry Storm is to RIM and Verizon. It's RIM's bold effort to fend
off the iPhone and Verizon's best hope for a star handset that draws people in, or at least keeps
them from bailing. The Storm's major innovation is what RIM calls SurePressmdash;the entire
touchscreen is fat, honkin' buttonmdash;which has been paired with a redesigned, finger-friendly
BlackBerry OS. We've already a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5060378/blackberry-storm-first-hands-on"showed you a lot of/a what the
fuss is all about, but now that we've spent some quality, uninterrupted time with the Storm, here's
why we think it falls short of its promise./p pstrongThe Hardware/strongbr strongThe Body/strongbr
It's surprisingly heavy. Like, heavier than RIM's manly slab of smartphone, a
href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/blackberry-bold"the Bold/a, at 5.47 oz to the Bold's 4.7 oz. It feels
thick, too, thicker than it actually is, because of its squarish shape. It looks good, it feels
okay in your hand. It's just kind of clunky at the same time. On the other hand though, all this
substance also makes the Storm feel really robust. You'll never feel like you're going to break
it./p pstrongThat Button Screen/strongbr When you push the screen and it clicks, it's a genuinely
satisfying tactile sensation that, as I said in my hands on, is clearly a finely tuned experience.
You won't accidentally press it when you don't mean to, but you don't have to drop a sledgehammer
on it, either. Like the rest of the body, it's a sturdy piece of hardware that seems like it will
hold up over the many, many thousands of clicks it will endure in its life time. The only concern
is that it seems like the chasm between the screen and rest of the body is a lint nest waiting to
happen. But the gap is large enough you should be able to clean your pocket gunk out with the edge
of a toothpick./p pstrongThe Other Buttons/strongbr For a touchscreen phone, the Storm has a lot of
damn buttons. Nine, to be exact: The four standard BlackBerry buttons, one side button, a volume
rocker, and dedicated lock and mute keys. I wouldn't get rid of any of them. The BlackBerry button
is still your best friend, since you'll still need to bring up the menu in practically every
situation./p pstrongScreen/strongbr The Storm has the biggest, highest resolution screen RIM has
ever produced with a 480x360 res. It's bright and beautiful, though not quite as stunning as the
Bold's since it has a lower pixel density. Still, the OS and video look fantastic on it, with
plenty of pop. The capacitive touchscreen is fairly responsivemdash;on par with the T-Mobile
G1mdash;though sometimes the OS lags behind you./p pstrongBattery/strongbr We haven't fully tested
the battery life on the Storm yet, but it seems to be respectable. The battery isn't quite as beefy
as the beast powering the Bold, but you shouldn't have a HUGE problem getting through the day on
one charge or anything./p pstrongNetwork/strongbr No Wi-Fi is a bummer, even with Verizon's
fantastic 3G network, 'cause not even it penetrates everywhere. That said, one of the Storm's
greatest strengths is Verizon's network, with its basically unbeatable coverage, and you'll get a
signal most everywhere that's not a subway, airplane or supervillian secret lair. 3G is plenty fast
and more reliable than ATT, so it's been sunshine. Any pokiness in web browsing is the software's
fault. Calls sounded great to the other party, though kind of muted to me compared to the Bold or
iPhone./p pstrongCamera/strongbr The camera is 3.2MP of noisy noise, like most cellphone cameras.
The camera is tarted up with some basic photo editing features and a dedicated flash, but it's
nothing incredible./p pstrongGPS/strongbr The GPS seems to provide a pretty accurate location with
a reasonable amount of speed, though you're stuck with Verizon's VZ Navigator as the main
navigation app (no BlackBerry maps). Some people really hate Verizon's program, so you might be
less than a happy camper here./p pstrongOS and Usability/strongbr strongInterface/strongbr RIM's
first touchscreen BlackBerry doesn't toss the old baby out with the buttons (or something like
that). It's very much the familiar BlackBerry OS, just with a UI that's been optimized for your fat
fingers. It's pretty, with big, easy-to-press icons, lots of fade transition as you move from
screen to screen, and standard highlight motif of lighting up a Dr. Manhattan shade of blue
whenever you select something./p pThe list menusmdash;like the menu pop up when you press the
BlackBerry button or lists of messagesmdash;are just spacey enough to be touchable without pressing
thing very often. The accelerometer is pretty decent at keeping up with you and will rotate the
screen in all four orientations, letting you choose to the have the four main buttons on the left
or right in portrait mode. It got "stuck" in the wrong orientation less often than the iPhone does
(to me anyway), which is good, since the only way to use the QWERTY keyboard is in landscape (or
conversely, SureType in portrait)./p pThe major issue with the interface, at least in the main menu
area, is that lags. Like, enough to be annoying. Scrolling through the main menu, for instance, it
seems like part of the scroll slowdown is built in (I don't know why) but it got choppy more often
than occasionally. The transition fades from screen to screen, besides being inconsistent
(sometimes you get 'em, sometimes you don't), make the OS actually feel slower. And when it does
lag, it's somehow more frustrating because it makes you distrust and pissed off at the SurePress
feedbackmdash;not good for your major selling point./p pstrongStability/strongbr The Storm needed a
little bit longer in the ovenmdash;I had lotsa lock-ups and crashes over the last two days with it.
Lag was all over the place, which is a cardinal sin with a touch-based UI. It really needs to be
more stable. I wonder how long before there's a software update, 'cause it needs one badly./p
pstrongThe Keyboard/strongbr The keyboard layouts themselves are roomy and perfect, with the QWERTY
subtly divided into two halves. Which actually makes for a good guidelinemdash;keep your thumbs on
their respective sides of the divide and you'll be a much happier camper when it comes to typing,
since you have to consciously let the screen pop back up between every letter press. Having a true
alternating rhythm between your thumbs makes it much easier to use, so you're trying to press a key
with your other thumb while the screen's already pushed in./p pRIM makes a big deal out of the fact
they've separated navigation from confirmation with their SurePress thing. That, hypothetically, is
a means to an end, the end being more accurate typing than a standard, feedbackless touch keyboard.
In that respect, it fails. Even after two days, with the keyboard's great layout and perfect size,
I was leaning just as hard on the autocorrect on the Storm as I ever did on the iPhone. Here's why:
Confirming I've pushed a key doesn't actually tell me whether I've pushed the right one. Which
makes the feedback, as far as typing on a keyboard goes, basically useless. It's made worse by the
fact that RIM's glowing blue highlights also are far less effective than pop up letters at
indicating what key you're pushing./p pI hate to say this, but I kind of came to hate typing on it.
Pushing the screen in over and over requires so much more effort than simply gliding my fingers
around a good touch keyboard. It was tiring. SurePress is a bit less annoying with the onscreen
SureType keyboard in portrait mode though. One other gripe is that you can't get a QWERTY keyboard
in portrait, even though its screen is as wide as the iPhone's./p pstrongOther Touchiness/strongbr
Copy and paste! Yeah, Storm's got it. You highlight text by putting your fingers on either side of
the text you want to highlight, then you've got a little menu that pops up below asking what you
want to do with it. Your fingers are probably too big to do it correctly every time, but once
you've learned the process of how to float the cursor with a long touch, it's easy and it works
most of the time. Moving the cursor around within text isn't quite as intuitive as the iPhone's
magnifying glass, but once you hover to take it into cursor mode, the whole screen acts like a
trackpad, so you can move anywhere around it. It works. There are some other cool UI things
heremdash;in your inbox, hovering over an email will bring up every one in that thread./p
pstrongEmail and Texting/strongbr It's a BlackBerry, so yes, the Storm is everything you'd expect
from one in the email department, like search, push, the works, just touched up with a touch UI.
For instance, the aforementioned easy search feature, which also bring a menu when you hover over a
person's name to do things like send them an MMS (take that iPhone!) or add to contacts that works
really well with touch. Thankfully, I saw lag in the email app far less than anywhere else in the
phonemdash;it was always snappy, and works really with the touch UI. It's also got a few subtle
aesthetic enhancements over the email client in the Bold. I'd like threaded text messaging, but
it's the standard BlackBerry setup here that looks just like email./p pstrongCalling and Visual
Voicemail/strongbr The phone UI is pretty dandy, with giant buttons all around and easy access to
logs, contacts, and contact search. Contacts is a fairly standard list thing with search. Visual
voicemail though, that is a snazzy looking app. It's kind of busy, but I think it's one place I
like the UI better than the iPhone./p pstrongBrowser/strongbr The first thing I asked the RIM rep
was how much better the Storm's browser was than the Bold, which kind of eats it when it comes to
scripts. He said it was improved "but don't expect a miracle." That's a good assessment. It's fast,
faster than the Bold whenever I put them side by side, but not quite the fastest browser on the
planet. It's also smarter than the Bold, rendering pages more accurately where the Bold slipped.
Performance once pages loaded was good. I'll be doing some more formal benchmarks, like with our
browser Battlemodo earlier today, shortly./p pOne thing RIM gets really right is the browser UI.
You have lots of of options for getting aroundmdash;two prominent zoom in and out buttons, plus you
can zoom by clicking. Very easy. You've got two main navigation modes thoughmdash;pan mode, where
your finger swipes zoom around the page, and cursor mode, where the whole screen acts like a
trackpad. I mostly stuck with pan mode. SurePress comes in handy when scrolling, because you'll
never accidentally press a link again. One thing I'd like is multitouch zooming (sorry, gotta say
it) and a way to quickly get to the bottom of the page, since a hard flick doesn't send you flying
like on mobile Safari. Overall though, RIM delivers pretty big here./p pstrongMultimedia/strongbr
The biggest improvement over the Bold is that the Storm comes with an 8GB microSD card.
Unfortunately, everywhere else, it's mostly the same. The media player UI is essentially identical,
with minimal tweaks to make it touchable. On the actual playback screen, it's fine, and album art
looks great. However, the list system it uses is fairly tired and straight out of the old
BlackBerry playbook essentially. The bigger pain point, if you're comparing it to the iPhone's
multimedia muscle, is the crappy Roxio Media Mananger. New phone, same crap. Please please please
get better media software RIM, this stuff is beneath you. Video looks really great though on that
screen!/p pstrongApps/strongbr Okay, so you've got Verizon's Navigator as the main navigator app.
It's okay and has some solid features, but not as easy to use as Google Maps. I haven't roadtest
it, but it's more responsive than on other phones I've used it on, and benefits from the Storm's
big screen./p pYou'll probably be excited when you see an icon in the main menu for the Application
Center. The Storm's App Store it is not. It's just where you can download Verizon and RIM's
pre-approved apps like Google Talk, AOL Instant Messenger, Flickr, Facebook and the like (there are
a lot of IM clients). It's where you'll grab software updates for the phone, but don't expect to be
using it frequently since updates will be few and far between. It's browser based, which is
annoying. The actual app store, the one you want, won't hit until next year, and we're waiting
impatiently for it. In the meantime, you can find BlackBerry apps the old fashioned way, on the
internets./p pstrongVerdict/strongbr The Storm is a strong effort from RIM, but it's not quite the
killer phone that they or Verizon need it to be. It's goodmdash;RIM clearly put a lot of thought
into the design. But I think it fall short of what they were aiming for, and ultimately what all
the hype is driving people to expect. For one, the damn thing needs to crash less often. SurePress
is not the end-all, be-all of touchscreen technologiesmdash;it's not really an evolutionary step
forward, even. The experience is fairly refined, but it could still use some more polish. Had this
Storm been left to brew a bit longer, it would've been much more powerful./p br style="clear:
both;"/ a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=36eb09d9a954759fea739ac8ac72ee43"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=36eb09d9a954759fea739ac8ac72ee43"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=36eb09d9a954759fea739ac8ac72ee43" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=DF17NK9m"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=120" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=kWakNnOp"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=41" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=7KkaWPYV"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=7KkaWPYV" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=wnThidoi"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=wnThidoi" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~4/bnUgghxEpbU" height="1" width="1"/

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webkettő (béta) -
13 hours and 3 minutes ago
Miért kellene nekem 400 gigás vincseszter és mi a fenének
egyáltalán a digitális zoom a digitális
fényképezÅ‘gépbe? YahooTech, avagy: populáris tekk.
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Ubergizmo -
13 hours and 6 minutes ago
centera href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/zoom.php?dir=2008/11/iRex/" target="_blank"img border=0
title="Hands-on: iRex 1000s e-book" alt="Hands-on: iRex 1000s e-book"
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/photos/2008/11/iRex-1000s-468.jpg" style="margin: 0 0 0 0;" /brimg
border=0 src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/img/gallery.gif" //a/center br/strong[DowJones
VentureWire Technology Showcase - EuroTech]/strong I was happy to meet with iRex CEO Hans Brons who
was exhibiting his great e-book at the a href="http://showcase.dowjones.com/"VentureWire Technology
Showcase/a conference. I was impressed by the quality of the 10.2" display that looks way better
than the a href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/09/plastic-logic-ebook.html"Plastic
Logic prototype/a that I saw at DEMO. According to Hans Brons, this is due to the 16-level grey
scale featured in the iRex, the Plastic Logic e-book has only 4-level grey scale like the Kindle.
Another unique feature is the ability to write and store notes on the documents, the Plastic Logic
e-book had it too but not as advanced (from the demo I saw). The iRex 1000s launched in September,
has no connectivity, but the iRex 1000 SW , available in Q1 2009, features Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, a
proprietary web browser and may be Bluetooth and 3G (I have to check for sure, it is not on the
product sheet). The battery can last several days when in the standard reading mode only (flip one
page per minute). This product is targeted to the people who manage tons of documents every day
like lawyers, professors or bankers. Click on the gallery photo button to see all the pictures,
full specifications after the jump. pa
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/handson_irex_1000s_ebook.html#comments"Add a
comment/a | From: a
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/handson_irex_1000s_ebook.html"Hands-on: iRex
1000s e-book./a | Visit a href="http://www.ubergizmo.com"Ubergizmo/a | a
href="http://www.uberbargain.com/"Good deals/a/p pmap name="google_ad_map_081119182116" area
shape="rect" href="http://imageads.googleadservices.com/pagead/imgclick/081119182116?pos=0"
coords="1,2,367,28"/ area shape="rect" href="http://services.google.com/feedback/abg"
coords="384,10,453,23"//map img usemap="#google_ad_map_081119182116" border="0"
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ismap="true"/img/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a
href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/ubergizmo?a=jUC3Byvl"img
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MetaFilter -
13 hours and 29 minutes ago
a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/nov/20/bnp-party-membership-griffin-court"Someone
leaked the membership list/a of the far-right British National Party. Someone else took the list
and created a neat a href="http://www.bnpnearme.co.uk/"Google Map/a that shows where all the
members live in the UK. Zoom out for a heat map of British fascism. The repercussions of the leaked
list include a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/nov/19/police-bnp-far-right-list"the
police force scanning the list looking for officers who are members/a (apparently that's not
allowed) and some people claiming they shouldn't have been on the list. br /
|
Gizmodo -
17 hours and 28 minutes ago
pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/11/exfh20topshot800wide.jpg"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" width="800" height="483" style="display:block;float:none;"
/strongThe Gadget:/strong The a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5066810/hands-on-casios-ex+fh20-the-budget-super+slow+mo-cam"Casio
EX-FH20/a camera, bargain brother to the popular a
href="http://gizmodo.com/383843/casio-exilim-ex+f1-slow+mo-super-cam-full-review-verdict-totally-unique-shockingly-powerful"EX-F1/a.
It features 1000 fps slow-mo video, a 40 fps burst mode for still shooting and a 9.1-megapixel
sensor, as well as good ol' 720p at regular speeds, all for a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5050388/exilim-ex+fh20-the-next-casio-slo+mo-shooting-camera-hits-1000-fps"just
over half the price/a of the original slow-mo star.script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8"
galleryPost("exfh20lightning", 3, ""); /script/p pstrongThe Price:/strong $600/p pstrongThe
Verdict:/strong Casio did a great job of bringing a
href="http://gizmodo.com/383843/casio-exilim-ex+f1-slow+mo-super-cam-full-review-verdict-totally-unique-shockingly-powerful"the
power of the EX-F1/a down to a beginner's level for the EX-FH20. The functions on the new camera
are more streamlined than its bulkier predecessor: missing are the dedicated shooting mode switch
dial, the multi-use focus/zoom ring and separate buttons for video and still capture from the F1.
But on the other hand, the FH20 bests the F1 in a couple places, with its 9.1MP sensor and 20X
optical zoom, compared to 6MP and 12X in the original. The on-board video editor is still there and
simple to use for cutting down lengthy slow-mo clips. And whaddya know, it takes decent (albeit
more point-and-shoot than DSLR quality) pictures too, as seen in the gallery below.script
type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8" galleryPost("exfh20burstshots", 6, ""); /script/p pscript
type="text/javascript" newVideoPlayer("/slowmoexfh20_giz.flv", 476, 376,""); /scriptimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/stills/slowmoexfh20_giz.flv.jpg" style="display:block;display:
none;" /But we know what you really want to see: how the slow motion video compares to the original
a
href="http://gizmodo.com/386936/mentos-and-diet-coke-explosion-at-1200fps-casio-ex+f1-strikes-again"exploding
Mentos-capturing beast/a. As seen in the clip above, it does the job much like the original. You
give up some video frames when opting for the budget cammdash;it records 210, 420 and 1000 fps
instead of 300, 600 and 1200 fpsmdash;but that's not a huge difference. And while 1000 fps video
shrinks is at a paltry resolution of 224x56 pixelsmdash;a
href="http://gizmodo.com/381363/casio-exilim-ex+f1-tomato-violence-at-300-600-and-1200fps"even
measlier than the original/amdash;it doesn't get as dark as the F1's output tended to, so you'll
have slightly more clarity in the crazy slow but still mostly novelty setting./p pscript
type="text/javascript" newVideoPlayer("/othervideoexfh20_giz.flv", 476, 376,""); /scriptimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/stills/othervideoexfh20_giz.flv.jpg"
style="display:block;display: none;" /It also shoots other types of video well. The 30 fps-210 fps
"She Walked in the Room" mode is still there, and is a fun way to make otherwise typical activities
look extremely epic. Also, 720p HD video is crisp and clean, and doesn't have the nasty "jello
effect" when panning that cheaper camcorders designed specifically for this purpose often suffer
from./p pIf you choose an FH20 over the F1, you sacrifice more than just not-as-slow-mo video.
Without separate buttons for video and stills, you lose the ability to capture images while you
record video, a great feature in the last model and the hardest thing to lose. Also gone is
ultra-fast 60 fps LED strobe flash option, but it can still fire off 5 fps with the standard flash
firing (vs. the F1's 7 fps). Most of the other features remain, though slightly dialed down: 40fps
high-speed burst shooting (with resolution dropped to 7MP) instead of 60fps on the F1, and smaller
sizes for slow-mo video as mentioned earlier. And you better bring some rechargeable
batteriesmdash;gone is the rechargeable Li-ion, and this camera eats four AAs like they were a
delicious piece of cake. But with the steep discount over the F1 and the more direct, easier to use
interface, for those who mostly want to shoot slow-mo video while taking a few pictures on the side
it's not a hard sacrifice to make. [a href="http://www.casio.com/"Casio/a]/p pWhat you gain with
the EX-FH20 over the EX-F1:br bull; 9.1MP camera sensor over 6MPbr bull; 20X optical zoom over
12Xbr bull; Easier interface for beginnersbr bull; $400 in your pocket (vs. the EX-F1's $1000 price
tag)/p pWhat you lose:br bull; Slow-motion video size and frames (EX-FH20 records in 210, 420 and
1000fps at 480×360 224×168 and 224×56
respectivelymdash;EX-F1 records in 300, 600 and 1200fps)br bull; Taking still shots while shooting
HD videobr bull; 60fps LED flash strobe modebr bull; 20 fps of burst still shooting (down to 40 fps
compared to 60 before)/p pOnce again, if you can't get Giz's slow-mo song du jour out of your head,
here's the Amazon MP3 link. [a href="http://amazon.com/o/ASIN/B001458N36"Hide and Seek by Imogen
Heap/a]/p pAnd if you're still humming the song made famous by the Harlem Globetrotters, here's an
Amazon MP3 link to that too. [a href="http://amazon.com/o/ASIN/B000QZDR2M"Sweet Georgia Brown by
Brother Bones/a]/p br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/ht.php?t=camp;i=d50d11e1b53e6719cdee374b8430d74e"img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/ht.php?t=vamp;i=d50d11e1b53e6719cdee374b8430d74e" border="0" //a
img src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=d50d11e1b53e6719cdee374b8430d74e"
style="display: none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=xQKmMLE5"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=120" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=WKCVxOjY"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=41" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=rGDt7thm"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=rGDt7thm" border="0"/img/a a
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src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=lkd5GLUZ" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~4/q_VFrgD1Ct8" height="1" width="1"/

|
DCEmu Forums:: The Homebrew & Gaming Network :: PSP Dreamcast Nintendo DS Wii GP2X Xbox 360 GBA Gamecube PS2 Forums - Dreamcast News Forum -
17 hours and 35 minutes ago
SNES9x GX is a
Super Nintendo emulator for the Wii based on the PC emulator
SNES9x 1.51 ( http://snes9x.ipherswipsite.com/). SoftDev is responsible for
the original SNES9x 1.50 GameCube port, whose work was continued by crunchy2.
It was updated for the Wii by michniewski and SNES9x 1.51 was ported by
Tantric. The project is currently being maintained by michniewski and Tantric.
|0O×øo· FEATURES
·oø×O0|
`¨·Ã‚¨Â¨Â¨Â¨Â¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
* Based on Snes9x 1.51 - superior ROM compatibility
* Wiimote, Nunchuk, Classic, and Gamecube controller support
* SNES Superscope, Mouse, Justifier support
* Cheat support
* Auto Load/Save Game Snapshots and SRAM
* Custom controller configurations
* SD, USB, DVD (requires DVDx), SMB, GC Memory Card, Zip, and 7z support
* Autodetect PAL/NTSC, 16:9 widescreen support
* Original/filtered/unfiltered video modes
* Turbo Mode - up to 2x the normal speed
* Zoom option to zoom in/out
* Open Source!
ח–*—–*—–*—–*
–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—
*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—-*—–*-–·Ã‚¬
|0O×øo· UPDATE
HISTORY
·oø×O0|
`¨·Ã‚¨Â¨Â¨Â¨Â¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
[What's New 007]
* added: SDHC support
* added: SD/USB hot-swapping
* added: zoom saving
* added: IPS/UPS/PPF patch support
* added: Qoob modchip support (thanks emukidid!)
* added: Added console/remote power button support (Wii only)
* added: Added reset button support - resets game (Wii only)
* changed: Settings file is now named settings.xml and is stored in the same
folder as the DOL - eg: apps/vbagx/settings.xml (Wii only)
* fixed: swc, sfc file support
* fixed: inverted sound channels
* fixed: some game crashes
* fixed: snapshot saving for games with SPC7110, BS, DSP, or CX4
* fixed: justifier support
* fixed: superscope turbo button
* fixed: widescreen support
* fixed: ActRaiser 2 issues
* fixed: Invalid memory accesses in C4 and OBC1. MMX3 Toxic Seahorse stage
now can be emulated with HDMA. (zones)
* fixed: Updated snapshot to prevent desync. Added some variables related to
APU and HDMA. (gocha)
* fixed: zoom issues (thanks eke-eke!)
* fixed: original modes (thanks eke-eke!)
* fixed: vertical scaling for filtered/unfiltered modes (thanks eke-eke!)
Download and Give Feedback Via Comments
Attached Files Snes9x
GX 007.zip (2.02 MB)

|
DCEmu Forums:: The Homebrew & Gaming Network :: PSP Dreamcast Nintendo DS Wii GP2X Xbox 360 GBA Gamecube PS2 Forums - Dreamcast News Forum -
17 hours and 35 minutes ago
SNES9x GX is a
Super Nintendo emulator for the Wii based on the PC emulator
SNES9x 1.51 ( http://snes9x.ipherswipsite.com/). SoftDev is responsible for
the original SNES9x 1.50 GameCube port, whose work was continued by crunchy2.
It was updated for the Wii by michniewski and SNES9x 1.51 was ported by
Tantric. The project is currently being maintained by michniewski and Tantric.
|0O×øo· FEATURES
·oø×O0|
`¨·Ã‚¨Â¨Â¨Â¨Â¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
* Based on Snes9x 1.51 - superior ROM compatibility
* Wiimote, Nunchuk, Classic, and Gamecube controller support
* SNES Superscope, Mouse, Justifier support
* Cheat support
* Auto Load/Save Game Snapshots and SRAM
* Custom controller configurations
* SD, USB, DVD (requires DVDx), SMB, GC Memory Card, Zip, and 7z support
* Autodetect PAL/NTSC, 16:9 widescreen support
* Original/filtered/unfiltered video modes
* Turbo Mode - up to 2x the normal speed
* Zoom option to zoom in/out
* Open Source!
ח–*—–*—–*—–*
–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—
*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—-*—–*-–·Ã‚¬
|0O×øo· UPDATE
HISTORY
·oø×O0|
`¨·Ã‚¨Â¨Â¨Â¨Â¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
[What's New 007]
* added: SDHC support
* added: SD/USB hot-swapping
* added: zoom saving
* added: IPS/UPS/PPF patch support
* added: Qoob modchip support (thanks emukidid!)
* added: Added console/remote power button support (Wii only)
* added: Added reset button support - resets game (Wii only)
* changed: Settings file is now named settings.xml and is stored in the same
folder as the DOL - eg: apps/vbagx/settings.xml (Wii only)
* fixed: swc, sfc file support
* fixed: inverted sound channels
* fixed: some game crashes
* fixed: snapshot saving for games with SPC7110, BS, DSP, or CX4
* fixed: justifier support
* fixed: superscope turbo button
* fixed: widescreen support
* fixed: ActRaiser 2 issues
* fixed: Invalid memory accesses in C4 and OBC1. MMX3 Toxic Seahorse stage
now can be emulated with HDMA. (zones)
* fixed: Updated snapshot to prevent desync. Added some variables related to
APU and HDMA. (gocha)
* fixed: zoom issues (thanks eke-eke!)
* fixed: original modes (thanks eke-eke!)
* fixed: vertical scaling for filtered/unfiltered modes (thanks eke-eke!)
Download and Give Feedback Via Comments
Attached Files Snes9x
GX 007.zip (2.02 MB)

|
DCEmu Forums:: The Homebrew & Gaming Network :: PSP Dreamcast Nintendo DS Wii GP2X Xbox 360 GBA Gamecube PS2 Forums - Dreamcast News Forum -
17 hours and 47 minutes ago
FCE Ultra GX is a
modified port of the FCE Ultra 0.98.12 Nintendo Entertainment
system for x86 (Windows/Linux) PC's. With it you can play NES games on your
Wii/GameCube. Version 2 is a complete rewrite based on code from the
SNES9x GX project.
-=[ Features ]=-
* Wiimote, Nunchuk, Classic, and Gamecube controller support
* iNES, FDS, VS, UNIF, and NSF ROM support
* 1-4 Player Support
* Zapper support
* Auto Load/Save Game States and RAM
* Custom controller configurations
* SD, USB, DVD (requires DVDx), SMB, GC Memory Card, Zip, and 7z support
* Custom controller configurations
* 16:9 widescreen support
* Original/filtered/unfiltered video modes
* Turbo Mode - up to 2x the normal speed
* Zoom option to zoom in/out
* NES Compatibility Based on v0.98.12
* Open Source!
ח–*—–*—–*—–*
–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—
*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—-*—–*-–·Ã‚¬
|0O×øo· UPDATE
HISTORY
·oø×O0|
`¨·Ã‚¨Â¨Â¨Â¨Â¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨'
[What's New 2.0.7 - November 18, 2008]
* Special thanks to eke-eke & KruLLo for contributions, bugfixes, and tips
* Video code rewritten - now has original, unfiltered, filtered modes
* Zoom option
* 16:9 widescreen support
* Full widescreen support
* SDHC support
* SD/USB hot-swapping
* A/B rapid-fire
* Turbo option
* Video cropping (overscan hiding) option (thanks yxkalle!)
* Palette changing fixed
* Fixed audio 'popping' issue
* Wii - Added console/remote power button support
* Wii - Added reset button support (resets game)
* Wii - Settings file is now named settings.xml and is stored in the same
folder as the DOL (eg: apps/fceugx/settings.xml)
* GameCube - Added DVD motor off option
Download and Give Feedback Via Comments
Attached Files FCE
Ultra GX 2[1].0.7.zip (1.29 MB)

|
DCEmu Forums:: The Homebrew & Gaming Network :: PSP Dreamcast Nintendo DS Wii GP2X Xbox 360 GBA Gamecube PS2 Forums - Dreamcast News Forum -
17 hours and 47 minutes ago
FCE Ultra GX is a
modified port of the FCE Ultra 0.98.12 Nintendo Entertainment
system for x86 (Windows/Linux) PC's. With it you can play NES games on your
Wii/GameCube. Version 2 is a complete rewrite based on code from the
SNES9x GX project.
-=[ Features ]=-
* Wiimote, Nunchuk, Classic, and Gamecube controller support
* iNES, FDS, VS, UNIF, and NSF ROM support
* 1-4 Player Support
* Zapper support
* Auto Load/Save Game States and RAM
* Custom controller configurations
* SD, USB, DVD (requires DVDx), SMB, GC Memory Card, Zip, and 7z support
* Custom controller configurations
* 16:9 widescreen support
* Original/filtered/unfiltered video modes
* Turbo Mode - up to 2x the normal speed
* Zoom option to zoom in/out
* NES Compatibility Based on v0.98.12
* Open Source!
ח–*—–*—–*—–*
–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—
*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—–*—-*—–*-–·Ã‚¬
|0O×øo· UPDATE
HISTORY
·oø×O0|
`¨·Ã‚¨Â¨Â¨Â¨Â¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨
¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨'
[What's New 2.0.7 - November 18, 2008]
* Special thanks to eke-eke & KruLLo for contributions, bugfixes, and tips
* Video code rewritten - now has original, unfiltered, filtered modes
* Zoom option
* 16:9 widescreen support
* Full widescreen support
* SDHC support
* SD/USB hot-swapping
* A/B rapid-fire
* Turbo option
* Video cropping (overscan hiding) option (thanks yxkalle!)
* Palette changing fixed
* Fixed audio 'popping' issue
* Wii - Added console/remote power button support
* Wii - Added reset button support (resets game)
* Wii - Settings file is now named settings.xml and is stored in the same
folder as the DOL (eg: apps/fceugx/settings.xml)
* GameCube - Added DVD motor off option
Download and Give Feedback Via Comments
Attached Files FCE
Ultra GX 2[1].0.7.zip (1.29 MB)

|
Ubergizmo -
18 hours and 41 minutes ago
centera href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/zoom.php?dir=2008/11/hp-tx2/" target="_blank"img title="HP
TouchSmart TX2: Multitouch Display on a Consumer Tablet PC" style="MARGIN: 0px" alt="HP TouchSmart
TX2: Multitouch Display on a Consumer Tablet PC"
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/photos/2008/11/hp-tx2-468.jpg" border="0" /br /img
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/img/photo-gallery.gif" border="0" //a/centerbr / pHP has put
together a new capacitive multitouch display and new software to bring the touch experience to the
next level. The company understands that users have reacted very well to touch-interfaces that are
well done, so HP is trying to adapt and get ahead of the game. The a
href="http://www.hp.com/go/touchsmarttx2"TX2/a is cool in many ways. First, we think that every
tablet PC should be finger friendly. There's nothing more frustrating than having to use the pen
for something as simple as moving a Window. /p pSo far, Tablet PCs have not been very popular and
it's fair to say that multitouch is most useful on this form-factor. The question is: will HP make
the Table PC cool? Without testing one, it's hard to tell, but I think that while HP might
jumpstart some interest, some heavy lifting in the software needs to be done by Microsoft at the
core if the Windows user interface. It's good to see someone taking the lead in this area. /p pa
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/hp_touchsmart_tx2_multitouch_display_on_a_consumer_tablet_pc.html#comments"Add
a comment/a | From: a
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/hp_touchsmart_tx2_multitouch_display_on_a_consumer_tablet_pc.html"HP
TouchSmart TX2: Multitouch Display on a Consumer Tablet PC/a | Visit a
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com"Ubergizmo/a | a href="http://www.uberbargain.com/"Good deals/a/p
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href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/ubergizmo?a=ULt03gat"img
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|
Emu Nova | Actualité -
21 hours and 8 minutes ago
strongFCE Ultra GX/strong correspond au portage de FCE Ultra 0.98.12 sur Wii et GameCube. Il
émule la strongNES/strong à vitesse réelle sur ces 2 consoles de salon. La
mouture 2 est une réécriture complète du code en se basant sur les projets
SNES9x GX et Genesis Plus GX.br / br / L'émulateur supporte :br / - les manettes Wiimote,
Nunchuck, Classique et GameCube,br / - les fichiers ROM iNES, FDS, VS, UNIF, et NSF,br / - les
parties multijoueurs à 4,br / - le pistolet Zapper,br / - le sauvegarde d'état/RAM,br
/ - les transferts SD, USB, DVD, SMB, et carte mémoire GC,br / - des filtres sonores et
graphiques.br / blockquote- Un gros merci à Eke-Eke KruLLo pour leurs contributions,
correctifs et astuces.br / - Réécriture du code vidéo. Maintenant il y a les
modes Original, Non-filtré et Filtré.br / - Option de zoom.br / - Support des
écrans 16:9.br / - Support du plein écran sur les écrans larges.br / - Support
du SDHC.br / - Commutation à la volée entre SD/USB.br / - Tire automatique sur les
boutons A et B.br / - Option Turbo.br / - Option vidéo "cropping" (pour cacher le
sur-balayage) (merci à Yxkalle).br / - Correction du changement de palette.br / - Correction
d'un problème audio "popping".br / - Wii : support du bouton Power.br / - Wii : support du
bouton reset (réinitialise le jeu).br / - Wii : Le fichier des réglages est
maintenant nommé settings.xml et est stocké dans le même dossier que le .DOL.br
/ - GameCube : ajout d'une option pour éteindre le moteur du DVD./blockquote pa
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/emunovaNews?a=wvFA5K"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/emunovaNews?i=wvFA5K" border="0"/img/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a
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src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/emunovaNews/~4/458678127" height="1" width="1"/

|
Ubergizmo -
22 hours and 22 minutes ago
centera href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/zoom.php?dir=2008/11/yourtour/" target="_blank"img
title="YourTour Makes Complex Travel Easy" style="MARGIN: 0px" alt="YourTour Makes Complex Travel
Easy" src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/photos/2008/11/YourTour_468.jpg" border="0" /br /img
src="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/img/photo-gallery.gif" border="0" //a/centerbr / pBy a
href="http://ustrategy.com/"Ravit Lichtenberg/a (a
href="http://ravitlichtenberg.typepad.com/"blog/a)/p pa href="http://yourtour.com/"YourTour/a, a
Belgian company, is among the demoing companies at the a href="http://showcase.dowjones.com/"Dow
Jones Venture Wire Technology Showcase/a. YourTour helps people turn highly complex travel simple
by enabling them to build full itinerary based on advanced criteria such as budget, accommodation,
and attractions. br /Users start from the location they want to travel to, their budget, duration,
and number of people--and then are able to choose from a number of accommodation options (hotel?
Chateaus?), available attractions (Museum? EuroDisney?), frequency of hotel changes, etc. /p pFor
their data, YourTour has partners with the hotel database, booking.com and LonelyPlanet.com; their
ldquo;powerful algorithmrdquo; crunches all the data in the back and delivers results within 20
seconds. /p pKeeping things simple seems to be the guiding principle for this Mons
Polytechnicrsquo;s department of mathematics spinoff. Still in private beta, the company is
focusing on travel in France and plan to extend to Spain and Italy next. The interface is plane but
it seems to work. This will make it easy for the company to act on its users feedback. User
generated content will also be integratedmdash;for now, user ratings are used to influence the
order of displayed results./p pa
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/yourtour_makes_complex_travel_easy.html#comments"Add
a comment/a | From: a
href="http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/11/yourtour_makes_complex_travel_easy.html"YourTour
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|
Techmeme -
23 hours and 23 minutes ago
Joanna Stern /
LAPTOP Magazine:
Hands-On With
the HP TouchSmart tx2z — When the Dell XT debuted with multi-touch
drivers last spring we were excited about the ability to use multiple fingers on its capacitive
touch screen to rotate pictures and pinch and zoom in on Web sites. But at over $2,000 (the
starting price now is about $1,800) …
|
|